The aesthetic still matters to me. No matter what the venue is I like seeing the pro serious-ness behind the band. But not overkill. I also like to see the band members playing near each other. Never cared for that 80s giant stage thing with folks running laps and going out into the audience. CCR at Royal Albert Hall to me is what I like. Or even Jackson Browne with the band and singers and pianos and equipment. You know what I mean - live music comes first. I never really needed a Show.
I like Geddy Lee's approach: a wall of washing machines is more honest than a wall of switched-off Marshalls. Music is hard enough without having to be a set designer.
@@davidjonorato3554 Dave! Hey do you remember a weird/dumb swap we did with a cherry sunburst LP deluxe for a bunch of rack gear? That stupid pop keyboard band needed me to have the rack/strat rig. You also got me a killer old Schecter/Tom Anderson Mary kay hardtail strat that had the huge baseball tele neck. -Skeet
One aspect that many people don't take into account (tonewood doesn't matter arguments, graphite rods in necks, not using a cab with a mic on it, etc)... ALL sound is vibration. Whether it's our vocal chords vibrating the air, or a string warbling while resonating and decaying while bolted to a plank of wood, or a stick smacking the skin of a wooden tube. Ultimately the speakers vibrate the air and the listener hears and feels those vibrations. If you're playing on stage and your instrument is vibrating against your guts, and every gesture of your hands and the notes that come out of your face move the air between you and the listener it can create a visceral or emotive connection.... THAT is the most tangible MAGIC imaginable. ☮❤🎶
David Gilmour said being on stage with the team working around him and sound touching his body is his instrument and nothing is comparable. (Paraphrasing)
I must agree about the factors that don't matter. Glenn at SMG keeps saying, tone is in the speaker. After that there isn't much else that affects tone.
@@Ottophil Do you realize that for the last 20 years, the wall of Marshalls on stage aren't even on? PA's have gotten so sofisticated that having 400 watts of guitar from a single player would fuck up the mix for the audience.
@@gbaxter6465 at least one of them is on though. And it’s just flat out cool as hell visually. Makes for a better experience as an audience member in my personal opinion. Obviously based on the band and type of music, but I much prefer to see some amps on stage.
As a rock musician who has done a lot of large shows and festivals, it's just not necessary. In Europe, my guitarist used a 100 watt Marshal combo on stage. I'm the keyboard player and had my own keyboard amp. We had a lot of front monitors. No in ears. We rocked the crap out of every audience and I quite assure you that nobody cared if we had a wall of cabinets or not. We were playing in front of several thousands with our biggest show headlining for 30,000.
The late 70s and almost all of the 80s were great for guitar players it was a fun time I remember most of it because I was awake for a good part of it thanks to coca cola lol
I'm a 27 year old boomer. My gear is 50 years old. One of my amps is a 70s Quad Reverb that was cut down to a twin. 2 of my guitars are 70s Gibson knockoffs. An Aria SG and a Univox ES-330 style. Plus my favorite acoustic is a Harmony H-162.
Cher may be the first auto tune, "Life After Love". It sold, rinse and repeat. Rolling Stones click on OD in "Satisfaction", then Kinks cut a speaker for fuzz on "You Really Got Me". First time's a charm. The masses will buy a kazoo orchestra tune if it has a drum loop, is 2 minutes, has a nursery rhyme hook. Great chat, keeep awn!!
There is a video, I think a Paul Davids video, where he and Adam Neely play a more in tune guitar. When Adam plays a D chord it sounds unnatural like midi because it is actually in tune compared to how a guitar sounds. Pretty mind-blowing to hear 🙂
This was great, guys. The 3 of you talking, reminiscing about gear and experiences are just great. So many stories of my own from studio times in the 70's. Thank you.
Happy New Year guys! Great to see you back together. One item you didn't mention about stage amps is intentional instrument feedback. I recall going to shows and guitarists standing in front of the speakers and using the air they move to create specific feedback sounds - screams, howls, etc. Those noises were part of the live rock and roll show experience.
"real people seeking real music"...I believe it is happening already--I watch a great deal of younger folks do reacts to music they have never heard and it is Wonderful! I am 67 and I watch them listen to songs I have known for 50 years or more and to watch their expressions and comments is priceless! BTW, thanks for doing the Christmas special on your Beato courses! I treated myself! ☺
Yes, I have come away from many of these reaction videos with the exact same thought, with a hopefulness in songs written by musicians who have developed a craft in song writing. Being reminded that it actually shows. You can tell the difference, proven through the response of these people who've not experienced such song writing. But still, this is a small, a very small group of people. I am personally very worried about the effects A.I. technologies will have on our culture.
Rick, love your videos! And these chats with Dave and Rhett are my favorites by far! Love to hear all of your opinions, and the genuine friendship that shows through is infectious!!
Great conversation boys, always a joy to listen in. I'm with you, I like real people making real music, with all the flaws in there making it unique. 👍❤️
I worked on a 24 trk board with a 2 inch tape.. for years. Man ,the bloody thing was like a huge old washing machine. I'm with Dave, man. If it lacks the humanity ,then it not for this human. love these conversations Rick . They are priceless treasures.
My granddaughter hijacked my YT account but I had to comment. Back in the 60's and '70's a friend had a band that played out just about every weekend. My dad had a radio and tv repair shop so I had access to tubes. I used to carry a selection of 12AX7's 6L6's 6V6's in the trunk of my car and I could "fix" their amps on the fly. I also sat in on the sound board if their sound guy couldn't make it. A lot of fun, those were the days!
Screw visuals. It's all about power! If I don't feel it.....the audience won't feel it. Rock= Power The wall of amps and cabs behind you guys says it all. Great discussion.👍✌️
Man this takes me back. At an audio engineering college back in the 80s we were taught how to maintain Studer machines (multi-track and 2-track). I must have paid attention because I won the Golden Screwdriver Award for Tape Machine maintenance. All this is so old school, yes, but it was the reality back then and you got into it. Really appreciate Rick's older viewpoint, Dave's obvious knowledge about all things tech, and Rhett's experience in both worlds. Great video, gents.
I was an engineer / producer at the University of South Carolina back in the 1980's. We had a 2 inch 16 track, a 32 channel Neve board, and we would mix down to a quarter inch 2 track Ampex. I loved that Ampex machine. We had Varispeed on it. It was a beauty to edit on. Even back then, in the late 80's, technicians were hard to find and expensive. We had our in-house staff for some things, but for the really specific stuff, we'd hire an outsider. Once, we get an east coast Ampex tech to take care of some trouble with the quarter inch machine. He comes in, fiddles with a few things, stops, and turns around and looks me right in the eye. "You know what's wrong with it, don't you?" Without a pause, "You turned it on. If you'd stop doing that, it'd be fine." Laugh and groan at the same time. LOL.
Live music needs to make a comeback. Like the revival in vinyl, I hope people start appreciating live performances again. I don’t want to see a laptop live, I want to see musicians.
Two factors may prevent this. Price and covid. A third might even be worthwhile artists. There are none I'd be motivated (or could afford) to go see as an older person. And the stuff the younger folks like is just unacceptable.
@@garyarmstrong9542 Covid is still a government problem, not a health problem. Every time you walk into a public place, there's a chance you can catch a cold, or the flu, or strep etc... I still have an immune system, so I'm going to go out into public places just like I did in 1980. The USA is hit by a viral pandemic or epidemic about every 3.5 years. Live music is going strong in Texas and most places.
@@TexanUSMC8089 I went to an open mic night last week that was packed. I didn’t realize at first that nearly everyone in the bar, except for the people waiting to play, was there to watch the game. Game ended, everyone left. It was sad.
@@TexanUSMC8089 That's funny, my neighbors both caught covid around Christmas Eve and they're both still feeling sick. So it sounds like a health problem to me.
I always wind up making a hundred comments on Rick's videos because they're so engaging. I just love these conversations❤! Even when I disagree with one of you (which rarely happens....) They are so great.
Rick Happy New Year buddy I have been enjoying your posts for at least a year and I thought it was about time I told you so. This is also one of my favorite examples of quality songwriting......maybe THE best. Loved your analysis as usual. I am a Connecticut based keyboardist working in CT NY NJ and MA mostly, also a ps teacher in Waterbury CT hope to hang out sometime thanks again.
@@inboxRichardJohnBeato yeah not that I don't trust an empty account on social platform that does ask to connect on a different platform, but... I don't.
Love it. I've been playing guitar around a campfire for 40 years (Gen X'r) and will tell you it is 100% human emotion. It's a connection between human beings, no matter the size of the crowd.
I dont play anything...but love the music I grew up on...and so much concert going...just did the 70 year old thing...learn so much fom this channel...thx!
These are some of the fun videos you have Rick. I agree, it would be great for you to jam with some folks more often. It really tells us a lot about the music you all really enjoy. Mark Knopfler will create a circle of 2 or 3 people, and they will jam on his video ! Some are pros and some are mid-level in their career, but it is fun to watch.
Always love when you guy get together and chat. LOL 24:10 is hysterical when Rhett says "he would sing some idea completely out of tune and it'd be like ok??"
I love the stage sound and look of expected instruments…. I’m not into in ear monitors for live shows, I love that live chemistry in the air… The immediate sound and relationship between audio energy on stage is vital to the groove and pocket… Stage sound and space help set the pace and guide for the larger scale front house sound. Sound tech listens and recreates that on the larger scale for the entire audience to be enveloped by it. A great stage balance always helps interpret into a great front house mix. Not to mention most amateur iPhone videos really suffer without some amount of stage sound or bleed. Preaching to the choir, but love the topic!😉 God bless those who enjoy in ears!
I just love how you can ask a guitarist a question and not get a response from them until they complete the riff or whatever is inspiring them at the moment. 😂😂 The shot looked good Rick!!
I think of Cheap Trick and their wall of 64 4x12 cabinets. As a bassist, I appreciate my compact combo rig over the old head and 2 cabs I had to lug around.
There's an art to being able to play your songs live! Not relying on laptops for taped parts. I loved the days of rehearsing to get my parts down tight and going into the studio and recording the record. After we finished the record we would start rehearsing again to play the songs live. Those were great times for me. There is nothing better than standing on a stage and feeling your pant leg moving from the percussion of the Marshall cab!
Love this episode. Aesthetics in a live band is important as you discussed. So is the wall of amps and rack of guitars in your studio on your UA-cam channel in the back ground. I can't imaging The Rick Beato Channel being as fun, interesting, or as creatable if you were sitting at a empty desk in front of a plain blue wall with only a potted plant to look at. Keep making great content.
Learned how to ping-pong multiple cassette decks in the early 1980's. Purchased my first four track Tascam around 1983, and purchased a brand new Tascam 488 MKII in the late 1990's. Everything I did back then was on cassette tape. Pro studios in the mid 1990's were using DAT. Computer recording was beginning to become a new tool that everyone seemed to gravitate to. It wasn't until about 2000, when I got my second computer that I started to learn how to record using Cakewalk Sonar and MIDI. I loved how easy it was to fix everything. Then, the technology started to push further and further away from imperfections, and more into having perfect, exact, precise, spotless recordings which sort of took away from the human element. I love the sound of music coming from analog. It's what I grew up with. I still have all of my vinyl and cassettes, but I also have my CD's too. Music is an art to be felt by humans. Loud, obnoxious amplifiers pushed to 11, will always accomplish that feeling. I play Fender amps exclusively.
Fascinating discussion. I was an IT engineer for the DOJ, and keeping the servers running sounds a little bit like what you guys were doing. Removing cards like network cards, memory DIMMS, drives going down and having to replace them, building servers, installing Operating Systems, etc. Fun times. Now I'm retired, and I use an AXE FX III although I own a Twin Reverb. Mostly I use the modeler, but I am a basement player and not on stage.
The main thing that I've taken away from playing lots of shows is that an audience loves nothing more than seeing someone persevere through adversity on stage with a smile on their face.
I hope "real music made by real people" becomes the next vinyl. AI taking over Top 40 seems to be the next logical step in an industry increasingly focused on predictable results and replaceable parts. Great discussion: thanks for sharing it with us : )
Rick, love this channel. I’m learning a lot, and enjoying the conversations like on this particular video. I came to you through red Shores channel. Just want to let you know how much I enjoy this channel and the Rick Beato channel. Please keep both of them going if you can thanks again.
I so much enjoy these talks. Live streams repel me. The distractions remind me of "participation awards". Please make more videos like this one. Thank you.
Great discussion,and dialogue. I saw The Cream live /" Wheels of Fire" in Montreal, Hendrix, Doors, Beatles, Stones and all the rest of the greats. I could imagine them without amps on stage, if the same sound would have happened. For vinyl is so true. It's the inner action that is part of listening to music. I still have my 8: track reel to reel from 1974, yes demagnetizing the heads was a drag.
I saw Billy Squire on the don't say no tour in the 80's. He took off his guitar for Stroke Me... climbed his stack of Marshall's and slipped and fell from the top. We heard a loud thud...buy he never missed a beat... great performer.
As a live sound engineer, small little combos mic’d up is the best compromise to reduce stage volume, especially in smaller venues. There are times I’ll prefer modeling in smaller venues to help minimize stage wash. Most of the modeling players will still bring a little powered speaker to put behind them so they can feel it, but I’ll still send a bit of guitar to their wedge. Less amp volume on stage , controling stupid loud bass rigs and cymbal bleed makes a HUGE difference in getting a clean vocal mic up front when the band is on a tighter stage. HPF/LPF are the most important tools for live!
Wow. You guys covered a lot of ground here. Great stuff, and you all made valid points. I'm a hobby guitarist who used to gig. As far as amps on stage, I think if it's a rock/metal show and there is anything less than a 412 cabinet, I'm disappointed before they even start! I do love gear and different tones, so I always want to hear how "whatever" amp/piece of gear sounds like in person. Most other genres can get away with just about anything(visually), but seeing a little combo amp doesn't bum me out, especially when the player really makes it sing. I could write a novella, but I digress. Keep up the good work!
Gary Backstrom from Massachusetts here Just wanted to thank you I love this stuff You guys are like my musical brothers that I’ve never met But I’d like to
I absolutely agree about the difference between robotic music and the sound of real people playing. I'm in Rick's age bracket, never produced or played professionally, but I hack with friends and sometimes we get off on a tangent and just play. And it's great - warts and all (except when I make the mistake 😕 ). And I still go to live shows and I still see and love the mistakes...a bit flat, a late start, whatever. People making music. Great chat, guys.
Awesome, it's been a while! I love the look and a bit of stage volume next to the drums for sure (half stack is all I'd need). Having said that, still to this day nothing tops Geddy Lee when he brought out the Maytag dryers.
These talks with Rhett and Dave are always great to hear
LOL, Rhett Shill is sub-human garbage.
That's what I was thinking these are awesome episodes when all 3 tell their experiences those are great
Weekly would be awesome
Thank you, guys. I enjoy these talks you three have so much. I wish you would do it more often.
Yes they are
You guys need to do these talks more regularly. I'd listen to y'all all day long.
The aesthetic still matters to me. No matter what the venue is I like seeing the pro serious-ness behind the band. But not overkill. I also like to see the band members playing near each other. Never cared for that 80s giant stage thing with folks running laps and going out into the audience. CCR at Royal Albert Hall to me is what I like. Or even Jackson Browne with the band and singers and pianos and equipment. You know what I mean - live music comes first. I never really needed a Show.
Wow you’re easily amused
Apparently so are the blind then.
Back off the disco there… biscuits….
I think they should play more!!
Strobe tuners were huge back in the day!!
I like Geddy Lee's approach: a wall of washing machines is more honest than a wall of switched-off Marshalls. Music is hard enough without having to be a set designer.
I want 10,000 cowbells on the stage.
Dont forget the chicken rotisserie
Yay, Dave Onorato - always a joy to listen to 👏
We need the Dave channel
Thanks!
@@davidjonorato3554 Dave! Hey do you remember a weird/dumb swap we did with a cherry sunburst LP deluxe for a bunch of rack gear? That stupid pop keyboard band needed me to have the rack/strat rig. You also got me a killer old Schecter/Tom Anderson Mary kay hardtail strat that had the huge baseball tele neck. -Skeet
The Three Amigos! I could listen to you three go on about guitar stuff for hours!
I must confess, the banter of the three amigos is my favorite RB series...
One aspect that many people don't take into account (tonewood doesn't matter arguments, graphite rods in necks, not using a cab with a mic on it, etc)... ALL sound is vibration. Whether it's our vocal chords vibrating the air, or a string warbling while resonating and decaying while bolted to a plank of wood, or a stick smacking the skin of a wooden tube. Ultimately the speakers vibrate the air and the listener hears and feels those vibrations. If you're playing on stage and your instrument is vibrating against your guts, and every gesture of your hands and the notes that come out of your face move the air between you and the listener it can create a visceral or emotive connection.... THAT is the most tangible MAGIC imaginable. ☮❤🎶
David Gilmour said being on stage with the team working around him and sound touching his body is his instrument and nothing is comparable. (Paraphrasing)
The sound and physical feeling of a Leslie, at full volume, can’t be recreated (as it stands with today’s technology) by a modeler.
Part of the vibes is how its created. Which tube amps are currently champs. But not for long.
I must agree about the factors that don't matter. Glenn at SMG keeps saying, tone is in the speaker. After that there isn't much else that affects tone.
@@awyep877 100%!!!
“The human element” and the feeling when a musician closes their eyes and plays from the heart …now that’s music! ✌️
I’m starting to feel old, but the music I love from the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s, is, and always will be the BEST!
Hi guys I am a real boomer born 1950. Listening to you guys from Australia. Guitarist shadows to Hendrix. You have a good show.
And when I think of Rush, I think of clothes dryers and rotisserie chicken.
I was just thinking about that! I’ve seen Rush three times and those shows were all amazing!
Love how Rick always defends the wall of multiple Marshall stacks onstage. 😂
Rock and roll is about pushing air. No volume, its no good
@@Ottophil Do you realize that for the last 20 years, the wall of Marshalls on stage aren't even on? PA's have gotten so sofisticated that having 400 watts of guitar from a single player would fuck up the mix for the audience.
@@gbaxter6465 at least one of them is on though. And it’s just flat out cool as hell visually. Makes for a better experience as an audience member in my personal opinion. Obviously based on the band and type of music, but I much prefer to see some amps on stage.
@@gbaxter6465 nevermind not on, the cabs don't have speakers in them! Dead weight.
As a rock musician who has done a lot of large shows and festivals, it's just not necessary. In Europe, my guitarist used a 100 watt Marshal combo on stage. I'm the keyboard player and had my own keyboard amp. We had a lot of front monitors. No in ears. We rocked the crap out of every audience and I quite assure you that nobody cared if we had a wall of cabinets or not. We were playing in front of several thousands with our biggest show headlining for 30,000.
GEN X. We loved and appreciated the music before, grunge, and now access to all of it. Sounds like a kick ass generation to me. 1975 Rulles!!!!!
The late 70s and almost all of the 80s were great for guitar players it was a fun time I remember most of it because I was awake for a good part of it thanks to coca cola lol
What a great first 30 seconds!!
I'm a 27 year old boomer. My gear is 50 years old. One of my amps is a 70s Quad Reverb that was cut down to a twin. 2 of my guitars are 70s Gibson knockoffs. An Aria SG and a Univox ES-330 style. Plus my favorite acoustic is a Harmony H-162.
Cher may be the first auto tune, "Life After Love". It sold, rinse and repeat. Rolling Stones click on OD in "Satisfaction", then Kinks cut a speaker for fuzz on "You Really Got Me". First time's a charm. The masses will buy a kazoo orchestra tune if it has a drum loop, is 2 minutes, has a nursery rhyme hook. Great chat, keeep awn!!
These hangs with Rhett and Dave are the best! Always a good watch :)
There is a video, I think a Paul Davids video, where he and Adam Neely play a more in tune guitar. When Adam plays a D chord it sounds unnatural like midi because it is actually in tune compared to how a guitar sounds. Pretty mind-blowing to hear 🙂
This was great, guys. The 3 of you talking, reminiscing about gear and experiences are just great. So many stories of my own from studio times in the 70's. Thank you.
Happy New Year guys! Great to see you back together.
One item you didn't mention about stage amps is intentional instrument feedback. I recall going to shows and guitarists standing in front of the speakers and using the air they move to create specific feedback sounds - screams, howls, etc. Those noises were part of the live rock and roll show experience.
Great for the ears too!
@@donyoung7874 WHAAAT?????
"real people seeking real music"...I believe it is happening already--I watch a great deal of younger folks do reacts to music they have never heard and it is Wonderful! I am 67 and I watch them listen to songs I have known for 50 years or more and to watch their expressions and comments is priceless! BTW, thanks for doing the Christmas special on your Beato courses! I treated myself! ☺
Yes, I have come away from many of these reaction videos with the exact same thought, with a hopefulness in songs written by musicians who have developed a craft in song writing. Being reminded that it actually shows. You can tell the difference, proven through the response of these people who've not experienced such song writing. But still, this is a small, a very small group of people. I am personally very worried about the effects A.I. technologies will have on our culture.
Great to see you 3 guys together again - always good to watch & I haven't even watched the video yet!
Rick, love your videos! And these chats with Dave and Rhett are my favorites by far! Love to hear all of your opinions, and the genuine friendship that shows through is infectious!!
Great conversation boys, always a joy to listen in. I'm with you, I like real people making real music, with all the flaws in there making it unique. 👍❤️
You should do more of these, and by you, I mean along with Rhett and Dave. These are gold!
Make it a series.
Nice. Got the band back together. Always love the ones with you three.
I worked on a 24 trk board with a 2 inch tape.. for years. Man ,the bloody thing was like a huge old washing machine. I'm with Dave, man. If it lacks the humanity ,then it not for this human. love these conversations Rick . They are priceless treasures.
More of this, please. I love hearing you guys talk.
Dave has got to be the bestest friends. “Can you fix this?”
Dave: “sure, no problem” 😅
Always good to hear a Ty Tabor / King's X reference.
YES! I was just thinking you haven’t had one of these in a while, and I haven’t seen Dave in a long time.
My granddaughter hijacked my YT account but I had to comment. Back in the 60's and '70's a friend had a band that played out just about every weekend. My dad had a radio and tv repair shop so I had access to tubes. I used to carry a selection of 12AX7's 6L6's 6V6's in the trunk of my car and I could "fix" their amps on the fly. I also sat in on the sound board if their sound guy couldn't make it. A lot of fun, those were the days!
This was a good dose of what I've been missing. 😊
Rhett and Dave-o two legends in their own right
God Bless Dave man..Sounds like so much stress he had to deal with all the machines and the Console..
Loved it Rick seeing all three of you reminisce and disagree is entertaining.
Love these “ampside chats”. Good dynamic and points of view with you three.
Rhett makes really good points about how things go in cycles, like vinyl.
Thanks Rick, been waiting for the return of Dave and Rhett!
Screw visuals.
It's all about power!
If I don't feel it.....the audience won't feel it.
Rock= Power
The wall of amps and cabs behind you guys says it all.
Great discussion.👍✌️
Man this takes me back. At an audio engineering college back in the 80s we were taught how to maintain Studer machines (multi-track and 2-track). I must have paid attention because I won the Golden Screwdriver Award for Tape Machine maintenance. All this is so old school, yes, but it was the reality back then and you got into it. Really appreciate Rick's older viewpoint, Dave's obvious knowledge about all things tech, and Rhett's experience in both worlds. Great video, gents.
I’m thankful you guy’s talking about pushed clean tones Because I’m so sick and tired of sterile sounds of today… 💯👍🙏
These are the videos I like to watch, along with Rick explaining the musical universe to me.
I was an engineer / producer at the University of South Carolina back in the 1980's. We had a 2 inch 16 track, a 32 channel Neve board, and we would mix down to a quarter inch 2 track Ampex. I loved that Ampex machine. We had Varispeed on it. It was a beauty to edit on. Even back then, in the late 80's, technicians were hard to find and expensive. We had our in-house staff for some things, but for the really specific stuff, we'd hire an outsider.
Once, we get an east coast Ampex tech to take care of some trouble with the quarter inch machine. He comes in, fiddles with a few things, stops, and turns around and looks me right in the eye. "You know what's wrong with it, don't you?" Without a pause, "You turned it on. If you'd stop doing that, it'd be fine." Laugh and groan at the same time. LOL.
Live music needs to make a comeback. Like the revival in vinyl, I hope people start appreciating live performances again. I don’t want to see a laptop live, I want to see musicians.
Two factors may prevent this. Price and covid. A third might even be worthwhile artists. There are none I'd be motivated (or could afford) to go see as an older person. And the stuff the younger folks like is just unacceptable.
@@garyarmstrong9542 Covid is still a government problem, not a health problem. Every time you walk into a public place, there's a chance you can catch a cold, or the flu, or strep etc... I still have an immune system, so I'm going to go out into public places just like I did in 1980. The USA is hit by a viral pandemic or epidemic about every 3.5 years.
Live music is going strong in Texas and most places.
What do you mean make a comeback? Is live music not popular where you live?
@@TexanUSMC8089 I went to an open mic night last week that was packed. I didn’t realize at first that nearly everyone in the bar, except for the people waiting to play, was there to watch the game. Game ended, everyone left. It was sad.
@@TexanUSMC8089 That's funny, my neighbors both caught covid around Christmas Eve and they're both still feeling sick. So it sounds like a health problem to me.
Thank you for another great video.
Totally enjoyed this conversation! Thanks Rick!
I always wind up making a hundred comments on Rick's videos because they're so engaging. I just love these conversations❤! Even when I disagree with one of you (which rarely happens....) They are so great.
Rick Happy New Year buddy I have been enjoying your posts for at least a year and I thought it was about time I told you so. This is also one of my favorite examples of quality songwriting......maybe THE best. Loved your analysis as usual. I am a Connecticut based keyboardist working in CT NY NJ and MA mostly, also a ps teacher in Waterbury CT hope to hang out sometime thanks again.
Cool discussion!
I wanted to thank you Rick, I actually started appreciating music more ever since I randomly stumbled upon your channel. so... thank you
@@inboxRichardJohnBeato yeah not that I don't trust an empty account on social platform that does ask to connect on a different platform, but... I don't.
5 Stars! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 These 3 Amigo studio chats should be at least a monthly feature... topics always seem to come up that many of us ponder!
Get it Dave!
great video. im 52 and feel like a boomer too. I didnt even realize till the end that this was a second channel. love it
Love it. I've been playing guitar around a campfire for 40 years (Gen X'r) and will tell you it is 100% human emotion. It's a connection between human beings, no matter the size of the crowd.
I dont play anything...but love the music I grew up on...and so much concert going...just did the 70 year old thing...learn so much fom this channel...thx!
I live alone, (quite happily) but these are like a little vinnette of hanging out with some mates...love it, thanks chaps.
These are the best videos. The three amigos!
You three together are trouble. LOL Great friends and fun!
These are some of the fun videos you have Rick. I agree, it would be great for you to jam with some folks more often. It really tells us a lot about the music you all really enjoy. Mark Knopfler will create a circle of 2 or 3 people, and they will jam on his video ! Some are pros and some are mid-level in their career, but it is fun to watch.
Always love when you guy get together and chat. LOL 24:10 is hysterical when Rhett says "he would sing some idea completely out of tune and it'd be like ok??"
1964 Righteous Brothers…. Real singers…. No auto tune needed.
I love these episodes! 12 years ago I was in a band and haven’t really played since. My love for geeky guitar talk hasn’t gone anywhere though!
I love the stage sound and look of expected instruments….
I’m not into in ear monitors for live shows, I love that live chemistry in the air…
The immediate sound and relationship between audio energy on stage is vital to the groove and pocket…
Stage sound and space help set the pace and guide for the larger scale front house sound.
Sound tech listens and recreates that on the larger scale for the entire audience to be enveloped by it.
A great stage balance always helps interpret into a great front house mix.
Not to mention most amateur iPhone videos really suffer without some amount of stage sound or bleed.
Preaching to the choir, but love the topic!😉
God bless those who enjoy in ears!
It's like a drummer playing a gig with an electric kit. It's not the same feel, not the same look, and is apart of today's modern plastic movement.
I love this stuff. Feels like sitting in a room with friends.
Thank You,
For Your Service
🤘🏻🏁
Great talk! Thanks guys
I miss these videos, love seeing the fellas get together and just shooting the shit.
Of all Rick’s guests ever, these are my two favorites
Played a big stage after club stage used my full SVT 8X10 Ampeg it was the BEST but not always practical, stage look is great too
I just love how you can ask a guitarist a question and not get a response from them until they complete the riff or whatever is inspiring them at the moment. 😂😂 The shot looked good Rick!!
Yes! A mention of Ty Tabor!😀
I think of Cheap Trick and their wall of 64 4x12 cabinets. As a bassist, I appreciate my compact combo rig over the old head and 2 cabs I had to lug around.
It's another installment of my favorite show!!!!!!!
There's an art to being able to play your songs live! Not relying on laptops for taped parts. I loved the days of rehearsing to get my parts down tight and going into the studio and recording the record. After we finished the record we would start rehearsing again to play the songs live. Those were great times for me. There is nothing better than standing on a stage and feeling your pant leg moving from the percussion of the Marshall cab!
Thanks guys! I had fun seeing you have fun.
I love these!
Love this episode. Aesthetics in a live band is important as you discussed. So is the wall of amps and rack of guitars in your studio on your UA-cam channel in the back ground. I can't
imaging The Rick Beato Channel being as fun, interesting, or as creatable if you were sitting at a empty desk in front of a plain blue wall with only a potted plant to look at. Keep making great content.
Learned how to ping-pong multiple cassette decks in the early 1980's. Purchased my first four track Tascam around 1983, and purchased a brand new Tascam 488 MKII in the late 1990's. Everything I did back then was on cassette tape. Pro studios in the mid 1990's were using DAT. Computer recording was beginning to become a new tool that everyone seemed to gravitate to. It wasn't until about 2000, when I got my second computer that I started to learn how to record using Cakewalk Sonar and MIDI. I loved how easy it was to fix everything. Then, the technology started to push further and further away from imperfections, and more into having perfect, exact, precise, spotless recordings which sort of took away from the human element. I love the sound of music coming from analog. It's what I grew up with. I still have all of my vinyl and cassettes, but I also have my CD's too. Music is an art to be felt by humans. Loud, obnoxious amplifiers pushed to 11, will always accomplish that feeling. I play Fender amps exclusively.
Fascinating discussion. I was an IT engineer for the DOJ, and keeping the servers running sounds a little bit like what you guys were doing. Removing cards like network cards, memory DIMMS, drives going down and having to replace them, building servers, installing Operating Systems, etc. Fun times. Now I'm retired, and I use an AXE FX III although I own a Twin Reverb. Mostly I use the modeler, but I am a basement player and not on stage.
man, this is going to be stuff people are looking at in a hundred years and sharing with their friends saying "I told you! Humans STARTED music!"
Nice to see Dave again!
The main thing that I've taken away from playing lots of shows is that an audience loves nothing more than seeing someone persevere through adversity on stage with a smile on their face.
Neil Giraldo played a Roland Jazz Chorus for his clean tone in his live setup with Pat Benatar, and they sounded KILLER!
So did James Hetfield
I hope "real music made by real people" becomes the next vinyl. AI taking over Top 40 seems to be the next logical step in an industry increasingly focused on predictable results and replaceable parts.
Great discussion: thanks for sharing it with us : )
You answered your own question ref old desks and tape machines, I’m 66 and I love my Cubase, love the channel!
Rick, love this channel. I’m learning a lot, and enjoying the conversations like on this particular video. I came to you through red Shores channel. Just want to let you know how much I enjoy this channel and the Rick Beato channel. Please keep both of them going if you can thanks again.
I so much enjoy these talks. Live streams repel me. The distractions remind me of "participation awards". Please make more videos like this one. Thank you.
Great discussion,and dialogue.
I saw The Cream live /" Wheels of Fire" in Montreal, Hendrix, Doors, Beatles, Stones and all the rest of the greats. I could imagine them without amps on stage, if the same sound would have happened.
For vinyl is so true. It's the inner action that is part of listening to music.
I still have my 8: track reel to reel from 1974, yes demagnetizing the heads was a drag.
I saw Billy Squire on the don't say no tour in the 80's. He took off his guitar for Stroke Me... climbed his stack of Marshall's and slipped and fell from the top. We heard a loud thud...buy he never missed a beat... great performer.
When I was building my rig, I loved the "clean" sound of the Roland JC. So, I got a JC-90. I still use it with modelers (line6, Kemper, etc...).
Reminds me of the same conversations that Baird Parker & I had in his studio, in Landale. R.I.P 💚
As a live sound engineer, small little combos mic’d up is the best compromise to reduce stage volume, especially in smaller venues. There are times I’ll prefer modeling in smaller venues to help minimize stage wash. Most of the modeling players will still bring a little powered speaker to put behind them so they can feel it, but I’ll still send a bit of guitar to their wedge. Less amp volume on stage , controling stupid loud bass rigs and cymbal bleed makes a HUGE difference in getting a clean vocal mic up front when the band is on a tighter stage. HPF/LPF are the most important tools for live!
Wow. You guys covered a lot of ground here. Great stuff, and you all made valid points. I'm a hobby guitarist who used to gig. As far as amps on stage, I think if it's a rock/metal show and there is anything less than a 412 cabinet, I'm disappointed before they even start!
I do love gear and different tones, so I always want to hear how "whatever" amp/piece of gear sounds like in person.
Most other genres can get away with just about anything(visually), but seeing a little combo amp doesn't bum me out, especially when the player really makes it sing.
I could write a novella, but I digress.
Keep up the good work!
Gary Backstrom from Massachusetts here
Just wanted to thank you
I love this stuff
You guys are like my musical brothers that I’ve never met
But I’d like to
Great stories and discussion.
I absolutely agree about the difference between robotic music and the sound of real people playing. I'm in Rick's age bracket, never produced or played professionally, but I hack with friends and sometimes we get off on a tangent and just play. And it's great - warts and all (except when I make the mistake 😕 ). And I still go to live shows and I still see and love the mistakes...a bit flat, a late start, whatever. People making music. Great chat, guys.
Awesome, it's been a while! I love the look and a bit of stage volume next to the drums for sure (half stack is all I'd need). Having said that, still to this day nothing tops Geddy Lee when he brought out the Maytag dryers.
You got the band back together!
Such fun times there in Atlanta for you guys! Always enjoy these bull sessions.